This study investigates whether the human brain has an organized baseline state of function that is suspended during goal-directed tasks. Researchers used positron-emission tomography (PET) to measure the oxygen extraction fraction (OEF)—the ratio of oxygen used by the brain to oxygen delivered by blood—in resting adults.
Key findings include:
1. Uniformity at Rest: Despite significant differences in blood flow and oxygen consumption between gray and white matter, the OEF remains remarkably uniform across the brain during a resting state (eyes closed, awake).
2. Defining Baseline: The researchers propose that this uniform OEF represents an equilibrium state of local neuronal activity, serving as a true physiological baseline.
3. Deactivation Patterns: Many brain regions, particularly in the visual system, consistently show decreases in activity (deactivations) during cognitive tasks.
4. Validation: By measuring the OEF at rest, the study confirms that these task-induced decreases are not merely artifacts of an undefined control state but represent a genuine drop from a stable baseline level of brain function.
The results suggest the existence of a default mode of brain function that is active when specific goal-directed behaviors are not being performed.
A study in Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging found structural differences in the precuneus, a brain region associated with memory and self-focus, in individuals who tend to ruminate, which is common in depression. The findings suggest that rumination may result from network-level interactions in the brain.